Giorgio Vale ( Italian: Giorgio Vale ; October 22, 1962, Rome - May 5, 1982, Rome ) is an Italian neo-fascist terrorist , activist of the Revolutionary Armed Cells . A close friend of Valerio Fioravanti and Francesca Mambro . Member of a number of terrorist attacks and political killings. He died in a shootout with the police.
| Giorgio Vale | |
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| ital. Giorgio vale | |
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| Occupation | terrorist , NAR |
Content
- 1 Neofascist action movie
- 2 In NAR shares
- 3 Death in the fray
- 4 See also
- 5 notes
- 6 References
Neofascist action movie
Ethnically, Giorgio Vale was a quarter Eritrean (a characteristic appearance created a special mark for the police) [1] . He has been politically active since he was 17 years old. He was a member of the far-right organization Terza Posizione ("Third Position"). Participated in pickets, demonstrations, distributed leaflets. He was one of the organizers of battle groups, was detained by the police for participating in mass fights with communist youth. Suspected of robberies to replenish the party cash desk. He was the confidant of Terza Posizione leader Roberto Fiore .
In the late 1970s, Revolutionary Armed Cells ( NAR ) came to the forefront of neo-fascist activity. Giorgio Vale established a close relationship with Valerio Fioravanti . Since the beginning of 1980, Valais has been increasingly dissatisfied with the passivity of Terza Posizione. Relations Vale with Fiore sharply complicated. After Fiore emigrated to Great Britain, Valais finally joined the NAR.
In NAR Shares
The first action, in which Giorgio Vale participated as a NAR fighter, took place on February 6, 1980 - together with Fioravanti, he killed a police guard at the Lebanese Embassy to take possession of weapons. May 28, 1980 Valerio Fioravanti, Francesca Mambro , Giorgio Vale, Gilberto Cavallini , Luigi Ciavardini, Mario Rossi, Gabriele Di Francisi were killed in a shootout by patrolman Franco Evangelista.
On September 9, 1980, the brothers Valerio and Cristiano Fioravanti, Francesca Mambro, Dario Mariani and Giorgio Vale killed the leader of the Sicilian Terza Posizione, Francesco Manjiameli, suspected of treason. Manjiameli, according to NAR, sabotaged the organization of the escape of Pierluigi Concutelli , and also spoke dismissively of Val as a mulatto . This was followed by the killing of two more suspected treason: Giuseppe Di Luca (July 1981) and Marco Pizzari (September 1981). In both cases, Valais was actively involved.
On October 21, 1981, a group of Francesca Mambro, Alessandro Alibrandi , Gilberto Cavallini, Walter Sordi, Giorgio Vale committed the assassination of police captain Francesco Straulla [2] (along with a security agent), known for his leftist views and ill-treatment of arrested neo-fascists.
On March 5, 1982, Giorgio Vale participated in a raid on a bank in order to seize funds to organize the escape of Valerio Fioravanti, who had been arrested by then. The stock failed. In a shootout with the police, a casual passer-by (17-year-old student) died, Francesca Mambro was seriously injured and captured. Giorgio Vale managed to escape.
Death in battle
After the arrest of the Fioravanti brothers, Francesca Mambro and the death of Alessandro Alibrandi, Giorgio Vale remained one of the last leading NAR militants who were at large. The police stepped up his search. May 5, 1982 he was discovered in Rome in a safe house. In the ensuing fierce skirmish, 19-year-old Giorgio Vale was killed [3] . (For some time, Valais was supposed to have committed suicide, but this version is considered extremely unlikely.)
There was no formal hierarchy in the revolutionary armed cells. However, Giorgio Vale - along with Valerio Fioravanti, Francesca Mambro, Alessandro Alibrandi, Gilberto Cavallini, Massimo Carminati - in fact belonged to the leading core of NAR. He was distinguished by such qualities as fanaticism, decisiveness, operational estimates. Vale's role in key NAR attacks and death in battle at the age of 19 made him one of the legends for neo-fascist youth.
See also
- Franco Anselmi